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Hafez Walid M

Bio: Hafez Walid M is an academic researcher from Intel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transistor & Gate dielectric. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 103 publications receiving 1367 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, a leading edge 22nm 3-D tri-gate transistor technology has been optimized for low power SoC products for the first time, and a low standby power 380Mb SRAM capable of operating at 2.6GHz with 10pA/cell standby leakages.
Abstract: A leading edge 22nm 3-D tri-gate transistor technology has been optimized for low power SoC products for the first time. Low standby power and high voltage transistors exploiting the superior short channel control, < 65mV/dec subthreshold slope and <40mV DIBL, of the Tri-Gate architecture have been fabricated concurrently with high speed logic transistors in a single SoC chip to achieve industry leading drive currents at record low leakage levels. NMOS/PMOS Idsat=0.41/0.37mA/um at 30pA/um Ioff, 0.75V, were used to build a low standby power 380Mb SRAM capable of operating at 2.6GHz with 10pA/cell standby leakages. This technology offers mix-and-match flexibility of transistor types, high-density interconnect stacks, and RF/mixed-signal features for leadership in mobile, handheld, wireless and embedded SoC products.

284 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2009
TL;DR: The low gate leakage of the high-k gate dielectric enables the triple transistor architecture to support ultra low power, high performance, and high voltage tolerant I/O devices concurrently.
Abstract: A leading edge 32nm high-k/metal gate transistor technology has been optimized for SoC platform applications that span a wide range of power, performance, and feature space. This technology has been developed to be modular, offering mix-and-match transistors, interconnects, RF/analog passive elements, embedded memory, and noise mitigation options. The low gate leakage of the high-k gate dielectric enables the triple transistor architecture to support ultra low power, high performance, and high voltage tolerant I/O devices concurrently. Embedded memories include high density (0.148 um2) and low voltage (0.171 um2) SRAMs as well as secure OTP fuses. Analog/RF SoC features include high precision, high quality passives (resistors, capacitors and inductors) and deep-nwell noise isolation.

142 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impact of silicon technology scaling trends and associated technological innovations on RF CMOS device characteristics, and the application of novel strained silicon and high-k/metal gate technologies not only benefits digital systems, but significantly improves RF performance.
Abstract: The impact of silicon technology scaling trends and the associated technological innovations on RF CMOS device characteristics are examined. The application of novel strained silicon and high-k/metal gate technologies not only benefits digital systems, but significantly improves RF performance. The peak cut-off frequency (f T ) doubles from 209 GHz in the 90 nm node to 445 GHz at the 32 nm node. 1/f flicker noise reduces by an order of magnitude from the 0.13 um node to the 32 nm node. Transistor noise figure, high voltage tolerance, and quality factors of RF passives all show similar benefits from technology scaling.

85 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: A low-power, high-speed SRAM macro is designed in a 65 nm ultra-low-power (ULP) logic technology for mobile applications that improves transistor performance/leakage tradeoff, which is essential to achieve fast SRAM access speed at substantially low operating voltage and standby leakage.
Abstract: -A low-power, high-speed SRAM macro is designed in a 65 nm ultra-low-power (ULP) logic technology for mobile applications. The 65 nm strained silicon technology improves transistor performance/leakage tradeoff, which is essential to achieve fast SRAM access speed at substantially low operating voltage and standby leakage. The 1 Mb SRAM macro features a 0.667 μm 2 low-leakage memory cell and can operate over a wide range of supply voltages from 1.2 V to 0.5 V. It achieves operating frequency of 1.1 GHz and 250 MHz at 1.2 V and 0.7 V, respectively. The SRAM leakage is reduced to 12 μA/Mb at the data retention voltage of 0.5 V. The measured bitcell leakage from the SRAM array is ∼ 2 pA/bit at retention voltage with integrated leakage reduction schemes.

74 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Jun 2015
TL;DR: A leading edge 14 nm SoC platform technology based upon the 2nd generation Tri-Gate transistor technology has been optimized for density, low power and wide dynamic range and a full suite of analog, mixed-signal and RF features are supported.
Abstract: A leading edge 14 nm SoC platform technology based upon the 2nd generation Tri-Gate transistor technology [5] has been optimized for density, low power and wide dynamic range. 70 nm gate pitch, 52 nm metal pitch and 0.0499 um2 HDC SRAM cells are the most aggressive design rules reported for 14/16 nm node SoC process to achieve Moore's Law 2x density scaling over 22 nm node. High performance NMOS/PMOS drive currents of 1.3/1.2 mA/um, respectively, have been achieved at 0.7 V and 100 nA/um off-state leakage, 37%/50% improvement over 22 nm node. Ultra-low power NMOS/PMOS drives are 0.50/0.32 mA/um at 0.7 V and 15pA/um Ioff. This technology also deploys high voltage I/O transistors to support up to 3.3 V I/O. A full suite of analog, mixed-signal and RF features are also supported.

71 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of electronic devices based on two-dimensional materials, outlining their potential as a technological option beyond scaled complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor switches and the performance limits and advantages, when exploited for both digital and analog applications.
Abstract: The compelling demand for higher performance and lower power consumption in electronic systems is the main driving force of the electronics industry's quest for devices and/or architectures based on new materials. Here, we provide a review of electronic devices based on two-dimensional materials, outlining their potential as a technological option beyond scaled complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor switches. We focus on the performance limits and advantages of these materials and associated technologies, when exploited for both digital and analog applications, focusing on the main figures of merit needed to meet industry requirements. We also discuss the use of two-dimensional materials as an enabling factor for flexible electronics and provide our perspectives on future developments.

2,531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Oct 2010
TL;DR: This review introduces and summarizes progress in the development of the tunnel field- effect transistors (TFETs) including its origin, current experimental and theoretical performance relative to the metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET), basic current-transport theory, design tradeoffs, and fundamental challenges.
Abstract: Steep subthreshold swing transistors based on interband tunneling are examined toward extending the performance of electronics systems. In particular, this review introduces and summarizes progress in the development of the tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs) including its origin, current experimental and theoretical performance relative to the metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET), basic current-transport theory, design tradeoffs, and fundamental challenges. The promise of the TFET is in its ability to provide higher drive current than the MOSFET as supply voltages approach 0.1 V.

1,389 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a mathematical framework to evaluate the performance of FETs and describe the challenges for improving the performances of short-channel FET in relation to the properties of 2D materials, including graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides, phosphorene and silicene.
Abstract: In the quest for higher performance, the dimensions of field-effect transistors (FETs) continue to decrease. However, the reduction in size of FETs comprising 3D semiconductors is limited by the rate at which heat, generated from static power, is dissipated. The increase in static power and the leakage of current between the source and drain electrodes that causes this increase, are referred to as short-channel effects. In FETs with channels made from 2D semiconductors, leakage current is almost eliminated because all electrons are confined in atomically thin channels and, hence, are uniformly influenced by the gate voltage. In this Review, we provide a mathematical framework to evaluate the performance of FETs and describe the challenges for improving the performances of short-channel FETs in relation to the properties of 2D materials, including graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides, phosphorene and silicene. We also describe tunnelling FETs that possess extremely low-power switching behaviour and explain how they can be realized using heterostructures of 2D semiconductors. Field-effect transistors (FETs) with semiconducting channels made from 2D materials are known to have fewer problems with short-channel effects than devices comprising 3D semiconductors. In this Review, a mathematical framework to evaluate the performance of FETs is outlined with a focus on the properties of 2D materials, such as graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides, phosphorene and silicene.

983 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
K. Kuhn1
TL;DR: Transistor architectures such as extremely thin silicon-on-insulator and FinFET (and related architecture such as TriGate, Omega-FET, Pi-Gate), as well as nanowire device architectures, are compared and contrasted.
Abstract: This review paper explores considerations for ultimate CMOS transistor scaling Transistor architectures such as extremely thin silicon-on-insulator and FinFET (and related architectures such as TriGate, Omega-FET, Pi-Gate), as well as nanowire device architectures, are compared and contrasted Key technology challenges (such as advanced gate stacks, mobility, resistance, and capacitance) shared by all of the architectures will be discussed in relation to recent research results

558 citations